EFF's Cindy Cohn On Why 'Code Is Speech' Is Key To Apple vs. FBI 102
blottsie writes: In a series of court battles in the late 1990s and early 2000s, Cindy Cohn represented plaintiffs challenging restrictions on DVD copying and the publication of cryptographic code. In all three cases—Bernstein v. United States, Universal City Studios v. Reimerdes, and Junger v. Daley—federal courts held that computer code merited protection under the First Amendment.
Cohn, now the executive director of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, endorsed Apple's repeated citations of her cases in its fight against a court order to unlock a terrorism suspect's iPhone for the FBI. But she said that the controversial iPhone-unlocking order impinged even further on Apple's free-speech rights than the restrictions in her cases.
Action vs Speech (Score:2, Troll)
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http://www.phonearena.com/news... [phonearena.com]
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Impressively clueless! "Giving information" and "force to say something specific" are two entirely different things. And of course "apology letters" only apply in the presence to wrongdoing on the part that has to write the letters, so they are completely irrelevant here.
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You find it weird that law should stop people from taking certain actions and newer forbid people from speaking? Really?
You must have been flabbergasted the first time you heard "Sticks and stones may break my bones. But words will never harm me."
For pretty much everyone else, the difference between action and speech is pretty clear and the identification of speech-like actions as one or the other is the only contentious point. Is writing an action? Or speech. And drawing? Painting? ...Coding?
The problem is
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One of the biggest lies we tell our children.
For the last time. Our kids do get hurt when hit with rocks and stones, Superman.
While we're at it. Your "Parachute-less skydiving: Learn by example." course was a nasty joke.
Re:Action vs Speech (Score:4, Insightful)
You don't see a difference between being ordered to hand over existing information and being court ordered to create a new and patentable, never before existing technology? When did anyone ever say that a few lines of code is all it would take?
How about subpoenaing a new invention by the builders of a safe deposit box to force open their vault? The design, engineering, manufacturing, testing, and delivery of the equipment - yeah, that's something you can subpoena.
Try harder.
Sure, accomodation (Score:1)
Given that it would be much easier to compel apple to hand over signing keys and documentation, I think this is a reasonable compromise. In fact, if Apple does indeed refuse to comply with the writ; it is reasonable and appropriate for the signing keys and documentation necessary to be demanded. The judge made a reasonable ruling, and the FBI made a reasonable request that balanced the need for search with the need for Apple to maintain security. If you read the order, the judge did not demand that Apple gi
Re:Action vs Speech (Score:5, Insightful)
First, it's not a few lines of code, it's an entire application that does not exist. If it were a few lines of code, then they would do it themselves.
Second, it's not just a code, it's specific, propriety code involving extreme company secrets. It's the kind of stuff that if it got out, would make their existing product worthless. It's the equivalent of asking Coca Cola for their secret formula. No, actually, that formula is mostly hype. Say, it's the equivalent of asking Marvel to give out an uncut edition of Dead Pool to the Pirate Bay a week before it opens in theaters.
Also note, the feds can still do this themselves, without Apple's help - it will just cost a load of money. Maybe $10 million. So they are trying to destroy Apple's reputation - worth a lot more than $10 million, just to save themselves $10 million.
Finally, it's not just Apple's Reputation on the line, nor is it just their business. It's international law and precedent. What the US can do to Apple, other countries can do to all other companies. I.E. If we let the feds force Apple to create an entirely new security destroying product, then China can force any company that wants to manufacture or sell in China to do the same.
It's a bad idea to make Apple do this, and the only people that think making Apple do it have not thought through all the obvious and clear consequences.
Mainly because a bunch of people in the federal government fed you a bunch of obvious lies (it's only ONE phone and we can't do it by ourselves).
The phone should definitely be cracked open - by the NSA without any assistance from Apple.
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It's one VERY important bit...
The last bit of freedom
Re:Action vs Speech (Score:5, Informative)
You're right. It is not just a few lines of code. It is one bit.
#define ENABLE_SELF_DESTRUCT_INCORRECT_PIN 1
The FBI is asking for the 1 to be changed to a 0.
Assuming, you are not just ignorant or a troll, maybe you should read the court order. They are ordering Apple to create a whole new class of software that RUNS ONLY IN RAM and does not replace or alter the existing firmware or data saved on the phone. This DOES NOT EXIST!!!! It has never existed. It is a whole new class of iphone software that has not been written. It is NOT a matter of changing a few constants and uploading it to the phone. They have to design a new product, test it and sign it.
Aside from the fact that it may be piss poor precedent to forcibly conscript a company to do considerable work which is in opposition to their conscience and business reputation, it is morally repugnant.
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How about due process and the right to appeal a decision? Or this week's precedent from the US District Court, District of Eastern New York regarding the exact same issue? Does Apple lose all their legal rights just because the FBI throws a hissy fit?
And another thing (Score:2)
The draft as an institution is enshrined in the Constitution:
US Constitution: Article I Section 8
Show me where in the constitution is
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So, what's the problem? Clearly the public has a compelling interest. Rights enumerated in the constitution were never meant to be superior to a compelling public interest.
Actually, the public has a number of competing compelling interests, which is what makes this episode messy and interesting. You note one interest.
A quick list of the ones obvious to me is:
1. An interest in resisting terrorist actions - what you speak for.
2. An interest in the safe and private use of electronic devices - which clashes with 1.
3. An interest in not being forced to do uncompensated work under force of a government order- i.e. a seizure.
4. An interest in the correct and balanced applicat
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No, they are also asking to allow PIN entry via lightning connector. Apple does not and has never supported that. It is completely new functionality that could not only take a while to write and test, but also affect other areas of the code in unknown ways.
That, I thought, was an amazingly stupid request. The FBI knows that there is a four digit passcode (it's clearly visible on the unlock screen of an iPhone how many digits are needed). If there wasn't the "erase after ten wrong keys" feature, then they could try 10,000 possible passcodes in a day or two. So clearly Apple's help isn't needed for this. So that part of the FBI request should clearly be rejected.
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Not the same thing (Score:2)
Its weird to me that they could compel someone from a corp to open a safety deposit box but write a few lines of code would be a no-go.
The two things are not remotely comparable in this case. What is being asked of Apple is equivalent to creating a master key to open all existing safety deposit boxes in perpetuity. To my mind that is a huge overreach by the government. If the government with its own resources can crack the encryption then so be it but I see no reason why Apple should be compelled to assist them in harming their own product and the privacy of millions in the process. If Apple could just open the one and no others then i
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Lets make your metaphor a little closer to what's going on here:
"It's weird to me that they could compel someone who designed a safety deposit box that has absolutely no other way to open it without destroying the contents inside to open it, against their own business wishes and policies, where they would have to manufacture a tool to do so at their own expense because it doesn't currently exist."
It's a little different than you are portraying.
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Its weird to me that they could compel someone from a corp to open a safety deposit box but write a few lines of code would be a no-go.
Is it also weird to you that you can copyright code but you can't copyright opening a safety deposit box? Both may be actions, but only one of them produces speech.
Code is not speech (Score:3)
Because if it were, monkey's couldn't code. And then how would you explain most Microsoft software?
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Microsoft has monkeys that can code? Not consistent with the observable lack of code-quality on their part. More likely, they use rabbits or some other species that is so stupid they can only survive by reproducing like crazy.
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I still have my DeCSS t-shirt to prove it.
Can you patent speech? (Score:2)
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madlibs! (Score:2)
Enjoy the cognitive dissonance of the 21st centurmary!
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You forgot
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Why isn't this a 5th Amendment issue? (Score:2)
You can't be forced to testify in court. How is this not the same thing?
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You cannot be forced to make thinks up when testifying. You cannot be forced to give expert-witness testimony that requires analysis work and conclusions. You can only be forced to describe the truth as it is known to you.
5th amendment doesn't apply here (Score:2)
You can't be forced to testify in court. How is this not the same thing?
You can't be forced to testify AGAINST YOURSELF. You absolutely can be forced to testify against someone else in most cases. The 5th amendment does not apply to evidence obtained legally. If your phone contains evidence of a crime you committed and the police can obtain this evidence through approved legal processes then it can (and will) be used against you. They can't force the defendant to reveal the password but if they obtain it some other legal way then the evidence can be used. The 5th amendment
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No, you CANNOT be forced to testify against somebody else. You can only be forced to describe the truth as it is known to you. If that happens to be bad for somebody else, that is an effect of the situation.
No difference (Score:2)
No, you CANNOT be forced to testify against somebody else. You can only be forced to describe the truth as it is known to you.
A distinction without a difference depending on who is doing the questioning. Furthermore testimony is routinely not truth and even when it is it may not end up as your version of the truth. Any lawyer worth his diploma can frame the questions and twist your answers to suit his narrative of "the truth".
if code is speech... (Score:2)
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The government can compel many people to speak. It simply can't compel you to self-incriminate. How does demanding Apple's encryption keys (even if the government were doing that) amount to "self-incrimination"?
Yes, and if you bothered to read my response, you'd understand why I
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"oh_my" claimed that the government cannot compel speech; I corrected him and pointed out that it can, and that it does so all the time. Nowhere did I say that that the government was limited to compelling speech. In fact, court orders can compel both speech and other actions.
In any case, the government could easily retreat to simply demanding that Apple
Re: if code is speech... (Score:1)
...nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.
That's the part of the fifth they refer to (also called the takings clause).
Might I suggest in the kindest and most respectively constructive way that you should reverse your craniorectal inversion, obtain a copy of the text, and carefully read the entire thing.
The government is attempting to compel Apple to provide, free of charge, several man-months of senior developers' time. This has a monetary value.
This is no different t
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Wrong amendment, I think: If the First Amendment protects freedom of speech, then surely it protects the freedom to remain silent as well.
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For such court orders, you have to answer the question, invoke the 5A, or face a contempt of court charge. The only other way out is to claim that compliance would be an "undue burden", which is what Apple is attempting.
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No. This court order would compel people to write a novel, make up a story, etc. That cannot be compelled. You can only compel them to share the truth as they know it, not to make up things.
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Yes, the court could compel Apple to share their current iOS source code and their current iOS signing keys; nothing needs to be made up.
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And you have apparently not understood a single thing of what this case is about. Because that is NOT AT ALL what the FBI is asking for.
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Hence, my use of the subjunctive: "if the court fails to compel Apple's cooperation, the court could..."
English: try learning it.
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You forget that there is a wrongdoing on the side of Volkswagen. Rather obviously so. They are asked/compelled to fix that. That is completely different.
The goal is clear (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.dailydot.com/politi... [dailydot.com]
It's nice to see people calling bull-shit on the argument that the government isn't seeking a precedent.
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Right. I think some people are arguing about the particular case ("Why don't they want to let the FBI access this particular phone? It was used by terrorists!") and missing that this is really an issue of the precedent that it creates. Speaking generally, can the government use the All Writs Act to force a software developer to develop new software, and what are the consequences if the developer doesn't comply?
It just doesn't make sense. Can they use the All Writs Act to force Ford and GM to create new
This sounds like a doomed argument (Score:1)
But even if we do accept that it is speech, the first amendment offers a lot less protection against being compelled to "speak" then being prevented from doing so. Courts will rule that a newspaper must print an apology, for example, and has means to compel witnesses to testify (The fifth amendment protects here)
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It cannot compel people to make stuff up, like a fairy-tale, a poem or a novel. And that is the aspect of speech we are talking about here.
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Re:Even if code is speech doesn't mean it's protec (Score:5, Insightful)
There is a huge difference between free speech, and speech you are forced to make.
You don't understand the concept, apparently. Apples "dangerous speech" is an inaction of not making speech, compelling Apple to do something is the exact opposite of free speech.
There is no rational scenario in which you compare forcing Apple to do something with restricted free speech. And if you think there is, you're an idiot.
In your analogy, giving a public endorsement to something under duress restricting their "dangerous speech".
You're a fucking moron if you think forcing something to do something is in any way related to restricting "dangerous speech".
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"Apple's case, their speech is designed to oppose law enforcement and help criminals."
So you are pretending that both Apple and the the person buying the phone have no benefit and want of encryption to protect their abundance of personal information in a phone. Therefore the only reason it exists is to defy law enforcement and help criminals. Lousy uninformed argument that smells like troll feces.
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Which would you find more offensive? Which is less forgivable? In the day /. would weed out this level of ignorance via nerd hostility. I'm assuming trolling or a shill.
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If encryption is 'designed to oppose law enforcement and help criminals' then stop using HTTPS right now. Go ahead and do your online banking and e-commerce in good ol' HTTP. After all, TLS can be used by terrorists, so therefore using TLS makes you a terrorist, right?
Can't imagine why you posted that nonsense as anonymous...
IF code isn't speech; no copyright (Score:2)
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You're conflating two issues. The issue at hand is whether Apple can be compelled to produce speech against their will. This isn't a question of whether Apple's speech is protected; it's a question of whether the government can compel someone to speak against their will.
The issue you're talking about has nothing to do with the current case as it exists today, and is instead asking if Apple in the future should have the right to produce any speech at all. That's an issue for legislators or the courts in the
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Just because 'death by terrorist' is rare, doesn't mean we shouldn't do everything we can to prevent it. Whether making Apple help decrypt the phone of a known terrorist is a step too far down a slippery slope, or whether our courts can be counted on to limit the access just to cases like this is a valid discussion. 'Don't worry because terrorists don't kill a lot of people in the US' is pretty lame. If nothing else, terrorists caused the US to spend a trillion or so dollars that could've been better use
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Sorry, I could have been clearer. I was basically getting at the idea of "use your noggin and stop allowing yourself to be terrorized". Obviously, terrorism deserves a response, but that response should in some way be proportional to the threat, rather than being "everything we can to prevent it", since if we literally were to do that, we'd be nuking the entire Middle East, which is clearly a disproportionate and uncalled for response. Likewise, attacking our Constitutional rights on the basis that terroris
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Re: Religion ... (Score:1)
If it is HS gym and he can do what he wants, then he doesn't have to care about the fire code, about safety, or anything.
There are limits to what you can do and requirements to what you need to do.
You want to bake cakes? Fine. But expect some conditions when you want to get into business of selling them.
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Likewise, a bakery run by Christians who oppose same sex marriage don't have to bake a cake with a pro-SSM message.
There's a bakery in Oregon [csmonitor.com] that would disagree with you. There's also a farm in New York [nypost.com] and a florist in Seattle [seattletimes.com]. We are absolutely not free to refuse, unless it's against someone not on the Approved Victim List.
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While I agree with you that all businesses should have the right to refuse service, regardless of the reason, those cases really aren't the same as the situation of being compelled to produce a product with a message that one disagrees with. In the three cases you cited, the businesses refused to provide the same services to same-sex couples which they already provide to everyone else. There was no message involved, unless you count the implied endorsement of same-sex marriage which may or may not attach to